enzyme that catalyzes the shifting of a funtional group on a molecule from one position to another.
An enzyme is one kind of protein that can catalyze a specific reaction whereas a regulatory enzyme is the enzyme which can regulate a series of reaction which undergo in the living organism. So we can say every enzyme is not a regulatory one but the regulatory enzymes are obviously a special kind of enzyme.
The type of molecule that is an enzyme is a protein molecule.
Catalysts are compounds that change the speed of chemical reactions. An enzyme is a protein and also a catalyst. So an enzyme can be a catalyst, but a catalyst can't be an enzyme.
The shape allows the enzyme to carry out specific chemical reactions.
Once you boil the enzyme, it will be inactivated. Milk will have no effects of the enzyme.
An aminomutase is a mutase which moves an amino group.
this is shamefully vague question. In glycolysis, glucose and (hexokinase, phosphogluco-mutase, aldolase, triose-phosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate-kinase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase and pyruvate kinase) enzymes are used.
Terence Robert James Lappin has written: 'Hormonal effects upon the kinetics of erythrocyte Diphosphoglycerate mutase'
The enzyme is inactive at this point. New enzyme must be added to regain enzyme activity
in an enzyme-substrate complex, the enzyme acts on the substrate .
An enzyme is a protein
The place where the substrate and the enzyme meet to allow the enzyme to function.
An angiotensin converting enzyme is an enzyme which catalyzes the creation of angiotensin.
the lipase enzyme :)
enzyme-substrate complex
Such an enzyme is called a restriction endonuclease
The binding of an enzyme and a substrate forms an enzyme-substrate complex. It lowers the activation energy of a chemical reaction